SCHOOL
OF COMMUNICATION
CMNS 240-3
| Yuezhi Zhao |
Fall
2001
|
| CC 6155; 291-4916 |
Burnaby,
Day
|
| Email: yzhao@sfu.ca |
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF COMMUNICATION
Prerequisite:
CMNS 130 required. CMNS 230 recommended.
Overview:
This course provides
an introduction to the political economy of communication and areas of macro
communication and analysis. The course is organized in two parts. The first
half explores the social historical and intellectual foundations for the development
of the political economy of communication perspective in the twentieth century.
In the second part, we will employ the political economy perspective to analyze
the organization of communication systems and make sense of current transformations
in a range of media and telecommunications industries in both national and global
contexts. While the course focuses broad social historical processes and macro-structural
issues, it relates political economic analysis to our daily experiences and
our roles as consumers and citizens in a media and commodity-saturated market
society.
Course Requirements:
| Tutorial Attendance and Participation: | 10% |
| Tutorial Assignments: | 25% |
| Mid-term Quiz (in class): | 25% |
| Final Term Paper: | 40% |
The School expects that the grades awarded in this course will
bear some reasonable relation to established university-wide practices with
respect to both levels and distribution of grades. In addition, the School will
follow policy T10.02 with respect to Intellectual Honesty, and Academic
Discipline (see current calendar, General Regulations Section).
Required Text:
Naomi Klein, No Logo, Knopf Canada, 2000.
In addition, students are asked to purchase a courseware package from the SFU
Bookstore.
Recommended Books: The following books are on reserve for additional reading.
Students may also find them useful for term paper preparation.
Wallace Clement, Understanding Canada: Building on the New Canadian Political
Economy
Robert Heilbroner, The Making of Economic Society (9th edition)
Vincent Mosco,
The Political Economy of Communication: Rethinking and Renewal
Robert McChesney:
Rich Media, Poor Democracy
David Croteau &
William Hoynes, The Business of Media: Corporate Media and the Public Interest
Lecture Topics:
Part I
1. Introduction to the Course
2. The Rise of Capitalism as a Global System
3. Technology, Markets, and States: A Historical Perspective
4. Communications and the Transformation of 20th Century Capitalism
5. Political Economy as a Framework for Analysis
6.The Marxist Perspective on Political Economy
Part II
7. The Commodification Process in Communication Industries
8. Changing Patterns of Ownership in Communication Industries
9. Globalization, Digitalization, and Multimedia (Re)convergence
10. The Evolving Role of the State in the Allocation of Communicative Power
11. Class, Gender, Race in the Constitution of Communication Industries and
Markets
12. Consumers, Citizens, and Struggles for Alternatives